Very happy and very satisfied.”This is how Dr. Joven Cuanang characterized the recently concluded “Pintôkyo: Contemporary Philippine Art Exhibition” held at the Hillside Forum in the trendy district of Shibuya in Tokyo, Japan. The neurologist-turned-art patron had many things to be happy about. Aside from the opening night on June 19 being well attended (cultural officials, dignitaries, art aficionados, collectors, and artists composed most of the audience), the show shone a spotlight on Philippine art to a degree never before seen. “Apparently,” said Dr. Cuanang, “this is the first if not the only show (in Japan) in which a whole body of Philippine contemporary artists presented their works in such a very beautiful space, in such a variety of motifs.”

Dr. Joven Cuanang, chair of Pintô International, posing against the bust of Dr. Jose Rizal in Hibiya Park. “Pintôkyo” was dedicated to the memory of the National Hero, whose 157th birth anniversary coincided with the opening of the exhibition.

Pintô NYC director Luca Parolari and artistcurator Tony Leaño

Fulfilling its vision of promoting cultural diplomacy between the Philippines and Japan, the exhibition featuring the works of 56 artists was graced not only by the Philippine Ambassador to Japan, H.E. Jose Laurel V, but also by the Japanese Ambassador to the Philippines, H.E. Koji Haneda. In a dinner he hosted at his residence back in the Philippines after the event, Ambassador Haneda articulated his appreciation for Pintôkyo and the desire for staging similar pursuits in the future. Dr. Cuanang said, “I told him, ‘Let’s cook up some art activity the Japanese Embassy can help facilitate.’ Ambassador Haneda and his wife are very much into arts. That’s a connection that happened.”

Showing their full support for the five-day exhibit were the officials of the Asian Cultural Council (ACC), which co-organized the show with Pintô International, from the different parts of the Asia-Pacific region — from Japan, Philippines, Taiwan, Singapore, and the United States. A day before the exhibit opening, ACC Japan, headed by its president, Yuji Tsutsumi, hosted a welcome lunch for the Philippine delegation.

ACC board member Ching Cruz

Photographed against their respective works are artists Elmer Borlongan and Igan D’Bayan during the opening of the exhibit.

Leading the pack from the Philippines were Dr. Cuanang, the board of trustees of El Refugio Arts and Sciences Foundation (which supports Pintô International), National Artist Benedicto “BenCab” Cabrera, and Filipino artists whose works were represented in Pintôkyo such as curator Antonio Leaño, Elmer Borlongan, Igan D’Bayan, Cris Villanueva, Annie Cabigting, Romeo Lee, Jim Orencio, Shannah Orencio, Candice Arellano, Ninel Constantino, Eleanor Giron, Erwin Leaño, Miles Villanueva, Jay Viriña, and John Paul Duray. Dr. Luca Parolari, who co-chairs Pintô International with Dr. Cuanang and directs Pintô NYC, flew all the way to New York to preside over the opening ceremonies.

For the succeeding days of the exhibition, many Japanese and tourists were introduced to a wide range of Filipino works as the venue is part of a network of art spaces in Shibuya, Tokyo’s frenetic cultural center. Some of them visiting for the first time, Filipino artists, on the other hand, got exposed to the unique visual language of Japanese art. Working with the Japanese in mounting this exhibition also opened their eyes to the discipline, precision, and professionalism the country is known for. “We’ve got a lot to learn from the Japanese,” Dr. Cuanang said.

Romeo Lee and Caloy Diaz

While the show did well financially (almost all the works got sold), what Dr. Cuanang hopes is for the succeeding pop-up shows (in Milan, San Sebastian, and New York City) to generate an international audience alongside our own. “I know that it’s just a starting point,” said Dr. Cuanang, “but I think what we need to do now is to go ahead and develop an audience that is not Filipino, because the buyers are still mostly Filipino.”

Avee Tan and Igan D’Bayan

The role of expanding the base for Philippine art chiefly rests on Pintô NYC, the permanent face of Pintô International to the world. Based in the East Village in New York, it will soon have a regular program showcasing Filipino artists as well as talents from the different parts of Asia. Should Pintô NYC prove to be successful, the pop-up shows may be downscaled. But for now, Pintô International is gearing up for its next one on Oct. 4, at the residence of the Philippine Ambassador to the United Nations, Teddy Boy Locsin, in Manhattan. Fueled with “pride for what our artists can do,” Dr. Cuanang is poised to repeat the success he has had in promoting Philippine art, this time on the world stage.

China has rejected as “unwelcome” the call of the United Kingdom, France and Germany on the South China Sea claimants to respect the arbitration ruling of 2016 and the rules-based framework laid out in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

The Philippines and China effectively consigned to limbo on Thursday the UNCLOS-based arbitral ruling in 2016 on their maritime disputes, and moved to explore instead a wider Code of Conduct for resolving conflicts in the South China Sea.

It would be a betrayal of public trust should the Duterte administration accept China’s rejection of the landmark ruling that invalidated its sweeping claim over the South China Sea, parts of which is the West Philippine Sea, former Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert Del Rosario said Saturday.